Black and Hispanic patients who enter publicly funded
alcohol and drug treatment programs are less likely to complete
treatment, compared with white patients, a new study finds. The
disparities are likely related to greater unemployment rates and housing
instability for black and Hispanic patients, according to the
researchers.
The study found about half of all black and Hispanic patients who
entered publicly funded alcohol treatment programs do not complete
treatment, compared with 62 percent of white patients. Similar
disparities were found for drug treatment programs, ScienceDaily reports. The researchers analyzed data from more than one million discharges from substance abuse treatment programs.
The researchers write in Health Affairs
that funding for integrated services and increased Medicaid coverage
under the Affordable Care Act could help improve minorities’ access to
treatment programs.
“Our findings show troubling racial disparities in the completion of
alcohol and drug abuse programs, and they point specifically to
socioeconomic barriers that make it difficult for minority groups to
access and sustain treatment,” researcher Brendan Saloner, PhD, of the
University of Pennsylvania, said in a news release.
“For example, in both alcohol and drug treatment groups, black and
Hispanic patients were more likely than white patients to be homeless.
But, disparities among the groups were found to be lower in residential
treatment settings, indicating that access to residential treatment
could be particularly valuable for these patients.”
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